BECAS
ALVAREZ MarÍa Alisa
artículos
Título:
Hiking and livestock favor non-native plants in the high Andes
Autor/es:
ALVAREZ, MARÍA ALISA; BARROS, ANA AGUSTINA; VÁZQUEZ, DIEGO P.; BONJOUR, LORENA DE JESÚS; LEMBRECHTS, JONAS J.; WEDEGÄRTNER, RONJA E. M.; ASCHERO, VALERIA
Revista:
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Año: 2022
ISSN:
1387-3547
Resumen:
Hikers and livestock using mountain trails damage native vegetation and act as seed vectors, thus favouring the spread of non-native plants. We evaluated the effect of trails and livestock abundance on the success of non-native plants in the arid central Andes of Argentina. We surveyed six trails, covering elevations between 2400 and 3570 m a.s.l. and recorded non-native and native vegetation using transects distributed along the elevational gradient and spanning distances up to 22 m from the trail. We assessed how non-native occurrence, richness and cover varied with distance from the trail, intensity of use by livestock, native plant community composition and elevation. We found that trails favoured non-native occurrence, but did not influence richness and cover, while livestock favoured non-native occurrence, richness and cover. Non-native richness and cover decreased with elevation and varied with native community composition. In addition, non-native richness was positively correlated with native shrub cover suggesting possible facilitative interactions. Our results show that despite strong environmental filtering that leads to decreasing non-native abundance with increasing elevation, non-natives occur up to the upper limits of vegetation, and that trails and livestock favour non-native spread in these mountains. Second Abstract in native language.